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The Honourable Sarah Smith (born 1968), is a radio and television news reporter with BBC Scotland, having joined in Spring 2014 for the run-up to the Independence Referendum on 18 September 2014.〔(Sarah Smith joins BBC News ) Retrieved 12 April 2014〕 Smith has covered stories ranging from the United States presidential elections and the Madrid train bombings (for which Channel 4 News won an International Emmy in 2004), to the resignation of Iain Duncan Smith and an exclusive interview with Saddam Hussein's defence lawyer. ==Career== Smith graduated from the University of Glasgow in 1989〔(Sarah Smith at Glasgow University Alumni ). Retrieved 19 January 2014〕 and then began her journalistic career as a graduate trainee with BBC Scotland. She spent a year living and working in Belfast for BBC Northern Ireland, during which time she was held at gunpoint by the Ulster Defence Association (UDA) in its West Belfast headquarters. In 1991, Smith moved to London as an assistant producer with BBC Youth Programmes, working on ''Rough Guide'', ''Rapido'' and ''Reportage''. Two years later she moved to news and current affairs, first as assistant producer with the ''Public Eye'' and ''Here & Now'' programmes. She then worked as a producer for the BBC on programmes as diverse as ''Newsnight'', ''Public Eye'' and ''Rough Guides''. On 5 News she was a reporter for two years. Smith was then the first newsreader on More4 News on Channel 4's digital television sister channel More4. She was Channel 4 News's Washington correspondent before moving to the post of Business correspondent in the summer of 2011.〔(Sarah Smith at Channel 4.com ). Retrieved 19 January 2014〕 She presented BBC Two's Scottish current affairs programme, Scotland 2014 alongside sports presenter Jonathan Sutherland. The programme aired on 27 May 2014.〔http://www.scotsman.com/what-s-on/tv-radio/sarah-smith-on-fronting-the-bbc-s-scotland-2014-show-1-3421848〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Sarah Smith (news reporter)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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